- Fri Aug 10, 2018 4:29 pm
#49373
It's hard to detect, joewoo198256, that's for sure! That's part of what made this one of the hardest RC passages in recent memory.
I think the best bit of evidence that author A acknowledges at least the possibility of benefits flowing from a lack of candor is in his discussion of those legal theorists who say that a "rigid adherence to a norm of sincerity is, they say, naive, foolhardy, and even dangerously utopian" (lines 7-9). He never disagrees with those theorists directly, but only speaks about how best to defend such a rule, so he leaves some room for the possibility that some judicial dishonesty might be beneficial in some cases.
Then, there's this at lines 12-15: "If it can be shown that following a general rule favoring sincerity produces the most prudential outcomes—whatever those happen to be—then the rule is justified." The fact that the author starts this with an "if" leaves us with the idea that the author is not absolutely convinced that judicial candor does always lead to the best outcomes. By negative implication, then, he at least concedes that some dishonesty might sometimes lead to better outcomes than honesty would.
It's thin, but in this case it's the only answer with even thin support from both authors, so we have to pick it, as painful as that may feel!
Adam M. Tyson
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